Good Morning All,
Genesis
4:7; “If you do well, will you not be accepted? And if you do not do well, sin is crouching at
the door. Its desire is for you, but you must rule over it.”
This
is one of my favorite verses in the Bible.
“Sin is crouching at your door”; it sounds so ominous, it sounds so
threatening and yet it is so true and we miss it often. This verse is part of God’s warning to Cain
before Cain killed Abel. As we look at
the story of Cain and Abel this verse is kind of haunting in the background.
Many of us have a vague view of Cain and
Abel. We have all see the artwork that
shows an angry, violent Cain attacking Abel.
Abel is often portrayed as smaller, weaker and, in some drawings, all
most effeminate. Yet this is probably a
very incorrect view of these two.
Abel was the nomad. He wandered and care for his sheep; moving
them from pasture to pasture, looking for water and new grass. He would have walked and had to carry some of
the sheep at different times. He was the
wandering from place to place moving with the seasons and the rains.
Cain was the farmer; he was the one who was
settled and “civilized”. He went on to
build the first city. This is an existence
which requires a steady and reliable food and water supply. It would lead to government and the
arts. Not exactly the image that we tend
to place on Cain; the violent and crazed murderer. Yet this is probably a point of this verse
that we need to understand. Sin,
especially our sin, tends to come from unique or hidden places; from places we
do not expect. It can creep into our
relationships as we begin to see ourselves as the important one in the
relationship and soon we have sin crouching at our door. We are jealous of our neighbor; we feel we
are “owed” something (money, power, respect); sin is crouching at the door.
What God is telling Cain, and us, is that
it is easy for our sinful nature to take over and cause us to sin. It is always crouching at our door just
waiting for the opportunity to strike.
If we are not diligent, if we do not pay attention sin will strike. Even when we know what is right we sometimes
do what is wrong because sin crouches at our door. Our only hope is to trust in God’s Word and
to focus on his grace as the method to fight temptation, to avoid the sin that
is crouching at your door.
We will face trials every day yet God
provides for us an escape from our temptation.
God promises to be with us and to protect us from the assaults of the
devil; who is always crouching at your door seeking to cause you to trip and
fall. Yet God will forgive us and draw us
back as we repent and turn from the sin that is crouching at our door.
Father,
we have sin crouching at our door often.
Guide us by your Spirit to defend against it. Help us to see it and to avoid it. Be with those who are especially being
tempted by sin. Help us to aid them in
their struggles. Use us to bring them
back into your heavenly family. In the
precious name of Jesus, our risen Savior, we pray amen.
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.